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Shostakovich With Strings


Article # : 17797 

Section : THE ARTS
Issue Date : 3 / 1990  1,715 Words
Author : Philip Kennicott
Philip Kennicott, based in New York, is a writer on performance arts.

       Composer Dmitri Shostakovich remains an immensely public and politicized figure, despite the fact that his supposed transgressions -such as his public readings of prepared pro-Stalinist speeches in the Soviet Union - have long been forgiven, dismissed, or forgotten. Though his integrity is no longer attacked, innumerable apologists still leap to defend him as a maligned cultural martyr. This year marks the fifteenth anniversary of his death, and it seems, even now, that he retains a mysterious hold on the Western imagination.
       
       Last autumn the Manhattan String Quartet offered New York a fascinating and rare traversal of all fifteen of Shostakovich's string quartets. It was, apparently, the first such complete cycle performed by an American quartet in New York City. For a string quartet cycle devoted to twentieth century music, the concerts were surprisingly popular. People not only attended the preconcert lectures by such figures as former ambassador to the Soviet Union Arthur Hartman, but remained loyal to the series, sitting through all five concerts. One wonders why the general public, which in New York has such a wide variety of cultural options, found this rather esoteric musical form so captivating. It seems Shostokovich's intense and often harrowing music struck a common nerve in the dwellers of Gotham.
       
       Shostakovich was born in 1906, in the midst of one of the most tumultuous periods of Russian history. His family was progressive to the point of having leanings toward one of the major nineteenth-century radical Russian political movements. Despite a revolutionary fervor that expressed itself in his first two symphonies and other early works, Shostakovich did not long remain in favor with the Soviet government. His artistic ... (2000 of 10925 Characters)
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